ABSTRACT: PART A : GENERAL INTRODUCTION AND LEGAL FRAMEWORK:.
Chapter I : General Introduction.
Chapter II: The Right to Health and the Right to Health Care in Human Right
Law.
Chapter III: State Obligations Resulting from the Right to Health Care.
Chapter IV: Equality, Non-Discrimination and the Right to Equal Access to
Health Care as a Human Right.
PART B: Practice and Discussion of the Justiciability of Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights:.
Chapter V: The Justiciability of Economic, Social and Cultural rights.
Chapter VI: The Justiciability of The Right to Health Care.
Chapter VII: The Integrated Approach.
PART C: The Justiciability of the Right to Equal Access to Health Care:.
Chapter VIII : The Justiciability of the Right to Equal Access to Health Care
at the European Committee of Social Rights.
Chapter IX: The Justiciability of the Right to Equal Access to Health Care at
the European Court of Human Rights.
Chapter X: The Justiciability of the Right to Equal Access to Health Care at
the Human Rights Committee.
Chapter XI: Conclusion.

ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Robert Koulish: Sovereign bias, crimmigration and
risk. 2. Michael Flynn: Sovereign discomfort: can liberal norms lead to
increasing immigration detention?. 3. Valsamis Mitsilegas: Immigration
detention, risk and human rights in the law of the European Union: lessons
from the Returns Directive. 4. Marloes Anne Vrolijk: Immigration detention and
non-removability before the European Court of Human Rights. 5. Galina
Cornelisse: Immigration detention: an instrument in the fight against illegal
immigration or a tool for its management?. 6. Dr. Charles Gosme: Trapped
between administrative detention, imprisonment, and freedom-in-limbo. 7.
Larissa Leite: Immunity from criminal prosecution and consular assistance to
the foreign detainee according the international human rights law. 8. Elspeth
Guild: Understanding immigration detention in the UK and Europe. 9. Mary
Boswoth, Andriani Fili and Sharon Pickering: Women's immigration detention in
Greece: gender, control and capacity. 10.Steven De Ridder and Maartje van der
Woude: Changing practices regarding the implementation of entry bans in
Belgian migration policy since 1980. 11. José Angel Brandariz Garcia:
Crimmigation politics and the great recession: analysis of the Spanish case.
12. Katia Cardoso: "Immigrants as detainees": some reflections based on
abyssal thinking and other critical approaches. 13. Mark Noferi: Mandatory
immigration detention for U.S. crimes: the noncitizen presumption of
dangerousness. 14. Christina M. Fialho: Let us in: an argument for the right
to visitation in U.S. immigration detention. 15. Gabriel Haddad Teixeira: Who
wants to go to Arizona? A brief survey of ciminalization of immigration law in
the U.S. context.

NOTE (GENERAL): Directive 2008/115/EC of the European Parliament and of the
Council of 16 December 2008 on common standards and procedures in Member
States for returning illegally staying third-country nationals

8.

Costello, Cathryn : The human rights of migrants and refugees in European law, 2016

BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph

The human rights of migrants and refugees in European law / Costello, Cathryn,
356 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2016.